One Republican candidate for Governor told Missourinet he is “gravely concerned” about the drowning of an Iowa man in state patrol custody, which has since led to the trooper in that case being charged.

Missouri Lt. Gov. Peter Kinder announces he will seek the office of Governor during a press conference in Dellwood, Missouri on July 12, 2015. Kinder, who has been Lt. Gov since 2005 made his announcement near Ferguson, MO, the site of unrest and protests last year. Photo by Bill Greenblatt/UPI

Missouri Lt. Gov. Peter Kinder Photo by Bill Greenblatt/UPI

20-year-old Brandon Ellingson drowned while handcuffed and in the custody of trooper Anthony Piercy on the Lake of the Ozarks on Memorial Day, 2014. Missourinet asked Lieutenant Governor Peter Kinder about that incident on December 6, following a candidate’s forum at the Lake of the Ozarks. 12 days later, Piercy was charged with involuntary manslaughter related to Ellingson’s death.

Kinder attributes that situation to the 2011 merger of the Highway and Water patrols.

“In this instance I think we had a highway patrolman who was not fully trained as he should have been,” said Kinder. “I would not be surprised if before the final chapter on that is written that the state has the serious liability.”

Kinder called Ellingson’s drowning, “a dark episode in the history of this state and law enforcement.”

Kinder said he opposed that merger.

“I don’t think the Highway Patrol wants the Water Patrol in their agency, and I don’t think the Water Patrol wants to be in the Highway Patrol, so I would take it back to the way it was,” said Kinder.

Missourinet reached out to the campaigns of the other candidates for governor seeking comment on Ellingson drowning case and its handling, but none have responded with comments. The campaign of Democrat Chris Koster referred Missourinet to the Attorney General’s Office, which Koster currently holds and is a litigant on behalf of state entities in the civil suit filed by the Ellingson family.

Piercy has been placed on leave without pay after a special prosecutor announced the charge against him on Friday.